“The search for knowledge will be better here because it’s a better place, and we want to be better because it’s a better place.”

Robert Shibley, dean

School of Architecture and Planning

Halfway through today’s grand reopening ceremony for Hayes
Hall, Bob Shibley walked up to the podium, looked at the crowd,
smiled and said, “God, this is fun.”

Fun it was as faculty, staff, students, alumni and members of
the community gathered on the Hayes Hall lawn on the South Campus
Friday morning to celebrate the official grand reopening of the
iconic home of the university’s School of Architecture and
Planning.

Hayes Hall underwent a $44 million renovation that began in 2010
and concluded earlier this year. It was named to the National
Register of Historic Places over the summer.

The exterior was completely restored, while the interior was
modernized and equipped with technological upgrades and
collaborative spaces, all designed to inspire and support
architecture and planning students of the 21st century.

“It is a spectacular facility, fully equipped to support
our teaching, research and service in the place-making
professions,” Shibley, the school’s dean, said in his
opening remarks. “The quality of space and light, the
embedding of technology in the learning environment, the efficiency
of its systems — the search for knowledge will be better here
because it’s a better place, and we want to be better because
it’s a better place.”

President Satish K. Tripathi said the Hayes Hall renovation is
another tangible result of the UB 2020 strategic plan, and even
joked that he wished his office was located in the building.
“As a leading 21st-century public research university, we
have imagined our future, planned for it and, working together, we
are building it,” Tripathi said. “While we have
restored Hayes Hall to its grandeur, it is also now a 21st-century
learning environment for our architecture and planning students and
faculty that will enhance UB’s mission of excellence in
teaching, research and service.”

What’s more, Tripathi said, Hayes Hall symbolizes the
university’s connection to the community and UB’s
mission of service. “By creating this reimagined space, we
are providing more opportunities for our students and faculty to
create scholarly research and output that has a profound and deeply
meaningful impact on the many communities we serve,” he
said.

In his remarks, Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown recognized UB’s
role in the city’s rebirth. “There is a tremendous
renaissance taking place in the city and UB has very much been a
part of all of the great things that are happening in Buffalo and
Western New York,” Brown said. “The renovation of Hayes
Hall is certainly a demonstration of UB’s commitment to the
institution itself, its commitment to the University Heights area
of the city of Buffalo, its commitment to the city and its
commitment to the South Campus.”

The building was constructed in the 1870s as the Insane Asylum
for the Erie County Almshouse. UB acquired it in 1909 and converted
it into an academic building in the 1920s, and renovated it again
in the 1950s. The School of Architecture and Planning has called it
home since 1977.

Shibley connected the determination of the building’s
original architect, George Metzger, to the enthusiasm put forth by
the school’s students, and which drives its faculty and staff
to be their best.

“The center building, before it had wings, was designed by
an architect accepting his first commission in the late 1870s. He
was 17 years old. Never tell a 17-, 18-, 19- or 20-year-old
‘You can’t do that.’ Every day our students
refresh and remind us of why we’re here, what the world needs
and how best to get it,” Shibley said.

“We know that our work is a reflection of ourselves, and
we take that reality very seriously,” said Micaela Barker, a
dual master’s student in architecture and urban planning, who
also spoke during the ceremony. “My hope is that Hayes Hall
will become the place where we all share our hard work with each
other and everyone else outside of our school, giving our work a
platform to speak back to us in a meaningful way.”

Friday’s grand reopening ceremony was just one of many
activities planned to celebrate the building. Other events Friday
include a symposium, exhibits of faculty and student work
throughout the building, and a talk by 1972 architecture alumnus
Michael Garz on his role as project manager for the World Trade
Center Transportation Hub.

Saturday’s festivities will feature a special edition of
Buffalo PechaKucha — a rapid-fire presentation format —
and a community conversation about the school’s future role
in the region.